Berlin gives green light for arms exports to S.Arabia, Qatar

Germany’s National Security Council has approved export of weapons such as tanks and machine guns to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and several other Arab countries, some of which are accused of backing jihadists, media report.

Weapons are to go to Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, Oman, Kuwait and Algeria, Sueddeutsche Zeitung
daily said on Thursday. This was confirmed by Reuters Friday
after the agency obtained a document from Economy Minister Sigmar
Gabriel.

The decision to export weapons to countries, some of which are
renowned for their poor human right’s records, was made by
Chancellor Angela Merkel, Gabriel and the foreign, defense and
development ministers – collectively known as the National
Security Council.

A document, which was sent to ministers by Gabriel on Thursday
evening, confirmed that the council approved the export of 45
Krauss-Maffei-Wegmann armoured cars to Qatar. It also mentioned
six weapons systems for testing and electronic surveillance for
Saudi Arabia.

The decision to grant the export licenses is in stark contrast to
a government decision in May, when two thirds of all proposed
arms export licenses were turned down. It is not however clear if
the new approved exports are the same ones, which were declined
earlier in the year and there has been no comment from the German
government.

But the decision has not gone down well in German political
circles. Jan Van Aken, a deputy from Die Linke, a far left party,
slammed the government and particularly called into question the
wisdom of delivering arms to Qatar.

“Gabriel has obviously completely caved in before the defense
lobby,” said Van Aken, adding that it was
“incomprehensible” that he approved the export of
armored vehicles to Qatar as it “openly supported the
jihadists in Iraq and Syria,” he said.

In August, Minister of Economic Cooperation and Development Gerd
Muller openly accused Qatar of financing the Islamic State (IS,
formerly ISIS) militants, although he has since had to apologize
for causing offense.

Qatar has always denied any links to the IS and points to the
fact that it has joined the US in air strikes against the
militants in Iraq. However, Qatar has openly supported a spectrum
of Islamist groups in the Middle East in a plethora of ways,
including through diplomacy, finance and in some cases weapons.

The German opposition has also accused Gabriel of giving in to
the powerful arms lobby. Under German law, any arms exports to
countries outside the European Union and NATO are forbidden and
countries must be considered on a case by case basis.

As recently as August, Gabriel who is a Social Democrat (SPD) and
vice chancellor, had been pushing for a tightening up of the
rules, especially for countries with a poor human right’s record,
and had asked for deliveries to Saudi Arabia to be stopped
completely, making the current decision all the more
controversial.

Defense companies employ 80,000 people in Germany, which from
2008-2012 was the world’s third largest exporter of arms after
America and Russia, according to the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute.

In 2013 Germany sold 5.8 billion euro (US$7.2 billion) worth of
arms, 62 percent of which was sent to non-NATO states with
dubious human rights records such as Saudi Arabia and Algeria.